Posts Tagged ‘YTB Lawsuit’

YTB has named James M. Tackett as the newest member of their executive team. The company, which has been involved in its fair share of scandal over the last few months, appointed Mr. Tackett as the company’s new Chief Marketing Officer, a role which will no doubt be both important in the near future and difficult, as the company struggles to regain its good name.   With a lot of concern surrounding Florida politician and YTB Board member Burt Saunders, this announcement comes at a good time.

Tackett has an impressive resume within the industry as a talented writer, producer and director with over two decades of experience in TV and video production. Tackett has consulted for some big name direct sales company’s such as Avon, Shaklee, Nikken and Herbalife to name a few. Tackett has also produced in flight programming for United Airlines.

Prior to joining YTB, Tackett worked as a producer with Video Plus, a supplier to the direct sales industry.

“We are excited and honored to include James in our fine executive team,” said J. Scott Tomer, Chief Executive Officer of YTB. “With his broad experience and talent, we have positioned ourselves to take our marketing initiatives to the next level.”

YTB is still dealing with the two class action lawsuits as well as the lawsuit by the California Attorney General.

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More questions keep coming up about DSA Member company YTB and whether or not the company is completely legit. Lawsuits have been filed, board members have resigned, and allegations have been flying for months now that the company, an online travel site, is running an illegal pyramid scheme. There has also been some talk about insider deals within the company.

Now comes word that amongst the members of the Board of Directors is Florida State Senator Burt Saunders, (R-Naples). Saunders serves on the Board of YTB International which operates YourTravelBiz.com.

Saunders, who is currently running for U.S. Congress has been paid in the past by the company to be its director and has received money as a consultant for the company. Financial documents show that he had received $16,000 dollars in 2007 from the company, no word yet on whether or not he has been paid for any services this year.

Currently YTB is facing two class action suits each asking for over $100 million dollars, with California asking for restitution for victims in that state. California’s Attorney General even went so far as to call YTB a pyramid scheme.

Saunders has yet to release any official statement regarding his current affiliation with the direct sales travel company, although he did say that the law suits were “silly.” In this day and age, when every politician’s life is looked into so deeply, this could have serious repercussions for Saunders if YTB is found to have operated an illegal pyramid scheme. I wouldn’t be surprised if Saunders is the next in line to step down from the board.

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We came across an interesting article written last week by Kevin Horrigan of the St. Louis Dispatch that was worthy of sharing. The following is Kevin’s personal perspective of YTB and his own personal experience with J. Lloyd Tomer.

There I was, reading Tim Logan’s excellent story in a Sunday’s Post-Dispatch about YTB International when a name from the past jumped out at me: J. Lloyd Tomer.

Why, just a couple of weeks ago, I’d been regaling my colleagues with a story from my days as a young general assignment reporter, and the time I found this small-town preacher who’d bought Elvis Presley’s airplane. And suddenly, there he was, on the front page of my newspaper. To quote Logan’s story:

YTB was launched in 2001 by three Alton-area veterans of the multilevel marketing industry: J. Lloyd “Coach” Tomer, a former pastor from Benton, Ill., who became a high-level salesman for insurance company A.L. Williams; his son Scott, who’s now YTB’s chief executive; and longtime business partner Kim Sorensen.

YTB (for YourTravelBiz) is based in Wood River. It is a multi-level marketing organization that sells folks a chance to become online travel agents. For $450 up front, and $50 a month thereafter, YTB members sell vacation packages. They also sell other YTB franchises. California Attorney General Jerry Brown says it’s a pyramid scheme, where only the people who get in early are likely to make any money. As Logan reported Sunday:

YTB’s 8,500 agents became 22,000 by the end of 2005. Then nearly 60,000 a year later. At the end of 2007, they had more than 131,000 agents and claimed 303,000 sales reps. Revenue boomed, too, nearly tripling to $141 million last year, when the company earned its first-ever profit. And a major trade publication ranked them the nation’s 26th-biggest travel agency.

“And it’s going to get better and better and better,” Lloyd Tomer said a weekly conference call this month.

Along the way, the Tomers prospered. Scott Tomer and Sorensen each earned $2.3 million in cash, benefits and stock last year, according to filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission. Lloyd Tomer earned $3.5 million. Top salespeople made out well, too: A couple earned more than the top execs last year, and 11 sales directors topped $800,000, according to the company’s publicly available income disclosure statement. Dozens more earned six figures.

YTB’s defenders say it’s more like like Amway and Mary Kay Cosmetics, multi-level marketing plans that deliver useful products, in YTB’s case, exotic travel and vacations. Illinois Attorney General Lisa Madigan has launched her own investigation, and two class action lawsuits have been filed in East St. Louis against YTB on behalf of disgruntled members.

But here’s the thing: If it is a pyramid scheme, it’s not the first one J. Lloyd Tomer has been involved with. Nor, for matter, is it the most unusual one.

When I met him, back in May, 1978, “Coach” Tomer was “Pastor” Tomer of the First Church of God in Benton. I drove over to visit him after reading that his church had bought a half-interest in Elvis Presley’s airplane, the Lisa Marie. Elvis had died the previous August, and the good pastor, then 44, was convinced that folks would pay $300 apiece to tour The King’s refurbished Convair 880.

Visitors would also get to hear the plane’s crew share stories about flying Elvis and his posse around the country, including the time he woke everyone up at 2 a.m. to fly to Denver where he could get his favorite fried peanut butter and banana sandwiches.

And as if the tour and tales of The King weren’t enough, Tomer told me, each and every visitor would get 12 $30 kits containing a gasoline additive called “Add-a-Tune” and a chance to sign up as a distributor for the product. Tomer’s partner, a Dallas businessman named Robert Philpott, claimed that treating your car’s engine with Add-a-Tune would boost its mileage by 2 to 6 miles a gallon.

“At times,” Tomer told me, “God says to me, ‘Go get ‘em, Tiger,’ and I go get ‘em.”

He figured the promotion would easily pay off the church’s$800,000 building debt within a year. Plus, church members would get on the ground floor as Add-a-Tune distributors, selling more distributorships and becoming wealthy. I told him it was the most elaborate church fundraising scheme I’d ever heard of. “We could have had a chili supper, I suppose,” Tomer said.

Alas, the 50-state tour that Philpott and Tomer planned for the Lisa Marie never got off the ground. By June of 1978 the Texas attorney general had quashed the marketing plan as being in violation of the state’s deceptive trade practices law. Philpott was discovered to have had problems with the IRS and the SEC. By July the Lisa Marie had been repossessed (it’s now parked near Graceland in Memphis). And a lot of people were stuck with dozens of cases of a useless oil additive.

Pastor Tomer became Insurance Man Tomer, and now is Coach Tomer. As Logan’s story recounts, he and his son are wheeling and dealing on a massive scale, renting out the Edward Jones Dome for rallies, buying and selling mansions doing lots of business with firms owned by YTB insiders.

I don’t know whether YTB is a pyramid scheme or not, but I’ve met Lisa Madigan and I would not like to have her on my trail. Maybe the Coach should have stuck to chili suppers after all.

We welcome anyone’s own personal experience with any company.  Our reason for profiling YTB was based on the recent news for the embattled company and the high level of attention they have been getting as of late.

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The news just keeps getting worse for YTB after being sued by former employees, having a class action suit filed against them and being sued by the California Attorney General, along with the most recent firings of over 20 of its employees, now comes word that a board member has resigned.

John Simmons, a prominent attorney, has just announced that he has resigned from the board of YTB. Both Simmons and the online travel company were careful when making statements about his departure.

YTB released a statement saying, “Mr. Simmons’ resignation was prompted by his belief that as a general matter he could not effectively influence the practices of the company’s management. Mr. Simmons has not furnished the company with any written correspondence concerning the circumstances surrounding his resignation.”

Simmons, an attorney specializing in personal injury law, did return calls to reporters, but declined to offer any other statement, instead saying that he had reviewed the statement given by the company and that comment will have to suffice.

Simmons served on the company’s Investment Committee and was considered and Independent Director by YTB.

YTB made sure to file all necessary papers, and did file the appropriate 8K with the SEC to formally announce the resignation.

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